“…The main clinical features are chronic rhinorrhea, nasal obstruction, facial pain, persistent epistaxis, and central facial deformity [6, 7]. Differential diagnoses of sinonasal cavernous hemangiomas include long-standing sinonasal polyps, mucoceles, inverted papillomas, polypoid cystic masses, angiosarcoma, other vascular lesions, neuroma, neuroblastoma, or lymphoma.…”